While the law school was tied for 80th last year, school administrators note that the change this year could be the result of a static bar passage rate. In the July 2013 bar exam, however, the bar passage rate soared seven points to 82 percent, which could indicate a ranking upswing for 2016.

A school’s bar passage rate is one of the complex array of metrics used by the U.S. News consumer guide in making its evaluations, including student/faculty ratios, employment at graduation and nine months afterward, LSAT scores and acceptance rates.

Dean Avi Soifer called the latest rankings recognition of the excellent education offered by the law school. “What makes our school exceptional, however, is not measured in these rankings,” Soifer noted. “We are able to personalize the legal education we provide, and our extraordinary diverse students support one another, have fun together and actually enjoy law school.”

Hawaiʻi Supreme Court Associate Justice Sabrina McKenna, class of ’82, noted that the law school is a powerful community resource. McKenna said she puts less stock in rankings than she does in other subjective values. “I don’t think there could be any better law school in equipping people for the challenges of the future—the challenges of bringing together people of different cultures and backgrounds to solve the world’s problems.”

Way to spoil the attraction of a falsely advertised flyer! UH Law School simply does not rank among “the best” law schools, when in fact its placement is at 100! Normal conception of “best” comes across at least in the top 20 arena of law schools and not above 99!